Treatment of Functional Movement Disorders With Psychotherapy



Status:Completed
Conditions:Neurology
Therapuetic Areas:Neurology
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - 85
Updated:4/21/2017
Start Date:December 11, 2012
End Date:July 23, 2015

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Background:

- Functional movement disorder (FMD) is a form of conversion disorder (CD). CD is a disorder
in which a person has neurological symptoms that do not have a neurological cause. These
symptoms can include pain, weakness, dizziness, and fatigue. Some thoughts on CD suggest
that it may come from feelings of anxiety that are converted into physical symptoms.
Treatment for FMD usually involves stress reduction, family help, and regular doctor s
appointments. Therapy interventions, however, have not been well studied. Researchers want
to see if people with FMD get better with psychotherapy. They will study two different types
of psychotherapy: group therapy and a self-help manual.

Objectives:

- To test two different types of therapy treatments for FMD.

Eligibility:

- Individuals at least 18 years of age who have been diagnosed with FMD by a neurologist.

Design:

- Participants will be screened with a physical exam and medical history. They will also
have a psychological exam, and answer questions about their mood and symptoms.

- Participants will be separated into three groups. One group will have group therapy.
Another will use a self-help workbook designed for people with FMD, and have individual
therapy sessions. A third group will just have standard care. During the study,
participants will continue to see their regular doctor.

- Group therapy participants will meet once a week for 6 months at the National
Institutes of Health clinical center. There will be 8 to 10 people per group. Sessions
will last 75 minutes. These sessions will work on methods for treating FMD.

- Self-help workbook participants will have six individual therapy sessions over 3 to 4
months. They will use the workbooks to learn about and practice methods for treating
FMD.

- All participants will be evaluated at 3, 6, and 12 months during the study.

- At the end of the study, participants will have a final follow-up session with exams
and questions similar to the screening exam. They will return to the care of their
regular doctor.

Objectives:

This is an exploratory study of two options for treating functional movement disorders
(FMD):

- Group psychotherapy

- Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)-based guided self-help.

Study population:

We intend to study adult patients with diagnoses of FMD seen by the Human Motor Control
Section Clinic (HMCS) and who live in the Washington-Baltimore metropolitan area for group
psychotherapy as well as patients who live out of the area for CBT-based guided self-help.

Design:

Patients will be screened for participation through protocol 07-N-0190 ( Neurobiology of
Psychogenic Movement Disorder and Non-Epileptic Seizures ). Those who meet the inclusion
criteria and who live locally will be invited to participate in a treatment study of group
psychotherapy. The duration of the study for each patient is one year. Local patients who
meet the inclusion criteria will be divided into two groups of 10 patients each. Accrual
will be gradual. All 10 patients in each group will start simultaneously. All participants
will undergo an initial assessment, followed by an assessment at 3, 6, and 12 months. The
primary endpoint will be assessed at 6 months. At the end of the study, all subjects will
undergo the same MRI studies they completed as part of protocol 07-N-0190 baseline
assessment. Patients will be evaluated with the scales described below.

Those who meet the inclusion criteria and who live locally will be invited to participate in
a treatment study of group psychotherapy. Local patients who meet the inclusion criteria
will be divided into two groups of 10 patients each. Accrual will be gradual. All 10
patients in each group will start simultaneously. All group participants will be asked to
sign a therapy contract , a nonbinding group therapy conduct guideline.

Patients who are out-of-town and meet the inclusion/exclusion criteria will be invited to
join the CBT-based guided self-help arm. They will be randomized in two groups of 20
patients each. One group will undergo CBT-based guided self-help; the other will be
randomized to standard of care. Standard of care is defined as pharmacological or other
treatment modalities excluding CBT or group psychotherapy (the studied modalities). Subjects
will be included on a rolling basis, and therapy will be delivered approximately once every
two weeks for a total of six sessions. Participants will be instructed in the use of
CBT-based self-help workbooks aimed at treating functional neurological symptoms (Overcoming
unexplained neurological symptoms: a five areas approach by Dr. Chris Williams, 2011, Hodder
and Arnold). Total duration of the intervention will be about 6 months. Subjects will
undergo the same assessments as patients in the group psychotherapy arm of the study at the
same time points. Only participants in the standard of care arm who successfully complete
the whole study will be offered the CBT-based guided self-help therapy after study
completion.

Outcome measures:

Primary Outcome measure

-Ability to participate in social roles and activities (Neuro-QOL Item Bank) at 6 months
after initiation of therapy.

Secondary Outcome Measures

- Clinical global impression of severity (CGI).

- Subjective and objective depressive and anxiety symptoms, measured with the Beck
Depression Inventory (BDI), Hamilton Depression Rating Scale-17, State Trait Anxiety
Inventory (STAI) and Hamilton Anxiety Scale.

- Patient and physician rated assessment of disease severity (5 point Likert scales).

- Somatic symptoms (SCL-90).

- Insight, measures with the Brown Assessment of Beliefs Scale (BABS)

- Similar measures at 12 months after initiation of therapy.

- MRI studies (resting state BOLD fMRI, DTI, VBM) comparison between baseline (protocol
07-N-0190) and 6 months after initiation of therapy.

- INCLUSION CRITERIA:

- Must have participated in Protocol 07-N-0190 ( Neurobiological studies of psychogenic
movement disorder and non-epileptic seizure )

- Diagnosis of clinically definite FMD utilizing Fahn and Williams criteria. The
diagnosis must be made by a neurologist

- Patients who have active movement symptoms at baseline and score at least 20 percent
less than the maximum score on the Neuro-QOL Item Bank

- Able to give informed consent

- All participants should be English-speaking

- Age 18 or older

- Willingness to come without reimbursement to treatment visits for up to 6 months

- Willingness to remain on the same medications for the entire duration of the study

EXCLUSION CRITERIA:

- Have significant neurological disorders (primary or comorbid) such as
neurodegenerative disorders, stroke, movement disorders or epilepsy

- Patients with psychotic disorders or bipolar disorder

- Patients with history of alcohol and substance use disorders within the last year, as
defined by the DSM-IV-TR (nicotine and caffeine use is not criterion for exclusion)

- Current suicidal/homicidal ideation

- Disease severity requiring inpatient treatment. Chronic pain requiring treatment with
narcotic medication

ADDITIONAL EXCLUSIONAL CRITERIA FOR MRI:

- Patients with movement symptoms at rest that may substantially inhibit resolution,
comfort, or safety of MRI

- Previous history of or MRI findings consistent with brain tumors, strokes, trauma or
arterial venous malformations

- History of traumatic brain injury with loss of consciousness or amnesia lasting
greater than a few seconds

- Contraindication to MRI

- Pregnancy

- Patients with current post-traumatic stress disorder, panic disorder or obsessive
compulsive disorders

- Patients on tricyclic antidepressants or antiepileptic medications.
We found this trial at
1
site
9000 Rockville Pike
Bethesda, Maryland 20892
?
mi
from
Bethesda, MD
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